My Blogs

November 06, 2011

Re-Imagining the Travel Camera

The travel camera is an essential today. The area is robust, with superzooms getting smaller with faster sensors, like the new Canon 510HS 12x zoom in a small body.

It is often said that the best camera is the one in your pocket, and this is fairly pocketable. But is it the right direction? I have been carrying the delightfully small Canon 780 for several years, and while a 3x zoom, it is a marvelously small camera, easily lugged around - and yet I am drawn to the other camera essential, the smartphone.

The iPhone has been a weapon of mass destruction. It is rolling over wireless. Walled Gardens have been opened, Nokia and RIM have been humbled, and markets not in the direct line of sight are stumbling – none more than digital cameras. The vast majority of digital photos put up on the web are from the iPhone, not the little point & shoots. The iPhone 4S has raised the bar to the point it is making little sense to have a P&S around when you have the iPhone. Maybe the photo giants like Canon, Nikon and Sony can retreat into super-zoom travel cameras and DSLRs, but they are then retreating into smaller markets. Is there an alternative?

Artefact Group has re-imagined the camera with the WVIL concept. It has spurred a flurry of comment across the blogosphere. This picture captures the essentials, which I can simplify into:

an Android base with WiFi (or 3G) to open the camera to apps and connectivity

a new lens system that uses folded lenses to extend focal length with mirrors to be much more compact

an ecosystem that is formed around a new camera platform

Interesting is that a trend in digital cameras is approaching this idea: the mirrorless design that drops the SLR mirror and uses an electronic viewfinder, often called EVIL cameras. Mirrorless makes the lens closer to the body, making it thinner and the lens smaller. Sony is the farthest along, and their recent NEX-5N is a huge leap, with am APS-C sensor like a DSLR, a touchscreen body and a new line of small lenses. Rumor is they are working on even more compact lenses, perhaps using a folded mirror inside.

I took my Canon Rebel on a trip to Africa, using the light-weight 70-300MM DO lens, and got tremendously crisp pictures. That lens is controversial but it worked supremely well. The APS-C sensor in the Rebel extended the 300MM to an effective 480MM.

On a trip to Egypt I used instead the then-recent Canon 18-200MM zoom. The lens is very convenient in range as a travel lens, and I never felt a need to go beyond the long end or less than the wide end ... but the pictures were soft.

Sony has a small NEX 18-200MM lens that reviews better than the Canon. More here. The speed of the Sony approaches the great Canon 7D. It is much lighter to use and has the same APS-C sensor. It is likely my next travel camera, with the iphone 4S as the quick P&S.

I was able to view pictures from the July 18, 2011 Sugarland ccnoert in Everett, WA. I attended the show but did not have the ability to take pictures. Are you willing to sell me prints of those you took? I would really love to have a picture record of one of the best ccnoerts I have ever attended.Thanks!Kristine